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Dive into the research topics where Zoltán Matus is active.

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Featured researches published by Zoltán Matus.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2007

Carotenoids in the egg yolks of collared flycatchers (Ficedula albicollis) in relation to parental quality, environmental factors and laying order

János Török; Rita Hargitai; Gergely Hegyi; Zoltán Matus; Gábor Michl; Péter Péczely; Balázs Rosivall; Gyula Tóth

Birds may influence the fitness of their offspring by transmission of different amounts of carotenoids to their eggs. Carotenoids play crucial roles in antioxidant protection and immune defence mechanisms, but they may be available to females in limiting amounts. Therefore, their allocation to the eggs may be influenced by the female’s condition, age and environmental circumstances. Furthermore, the quality of the male parent, which affects the reproductive value of the offspring, may also influence this investment. In this correlational study, we investigated proximate and ultimate factors that may lead to variation in yolk lutein, zeaxanthin and β-carotene concentrations among and within clutches of a wild passerine, the collared flycatcher (Ficedula albicollis). We found that carotenoid concentration was positively associated with caterpillar supply at the time of egg formation, which suggests a proximate constraint of carotenoid availability on yolk composition. Neither female condition, body size, age, nor male plumage ornamentation, age and body size correlated with carotenoid deposition. Yolk β-carotene concentration was found to be positively linked to yolk testosterone concentration. We suggest that females allocated more β-carotene to their eggs to mitigate the potentially detrimental effects of elevated steroid concentration. We found that concentration of β-carotene increased with laying order. The possible function of this pattern may be to enhance the resistance to oxidative stress and pathogens of the disadvantaged last-hatching nestling, suggesting that collared flycatchers pursue a compensatory, “brood survival” strategy.


European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 1999

Decrease in serum levels of vitamin A and zeaxanthin in patients with colorectal polyp

György Rumi; Imre Szabó; Áron Vincze; Zoltán Matus; Gyula Tóth; Gyula Mózsik

OBJECTIVE Several retrospective and prospective epidemiological investigations have demonstrated that a diet rich in carotenoids could prevent the development of pre-cancerous and neoplastic lesions of the digestive tract. The aim of this examination was to analyse the correlation between colorectal polyps with different histological classifications and serum carotenoid levels. DESIGN AND METHODS A 10 ml blood sample was taken from all of the patients after the colonoscopic diagnosis. The serum levels of vitamin A, lutein, zeaxanthin, alpha- and beta-cryptoxanthin, alpha- and beta-carotene were measured in patients with adenomatous colorectal polyp (n = 59, 35 males, 24 females) by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and compared with those in healthy subjects (n = 20, 10 males, 10 females). The patients were separated into four groups depending on their histological findings. RESULTS The serum levels of vitamin A and zeaxanthin were significantly lower in all patients with polyps (vitamin A: 0.913 +/- 0.112 micromol/l, zeaxanthin: 0.071 +/- 0.012 micromol/l) than in the control healthy group (vitamin A: 2.036 +/- 0.354 micromol/l, zeaxanthin: 0.138 +/- 0.048 micromol/l). The lowest levels were found in patients with focal adenocarcinoma in the polyp. There were no significant differences in the serum levels of other carotenoids. The serum levels of cholesterol, haemoglobin, total protein and albumin were normal in these patients. CONCLUSIONS There are close and inverse correlations between the serum level of carotenoids and colorectal polyps with different histological grades. The low mean carotenoid levels in patients with adenocarcinoma in the polyp indicate that deficiency of carotenoids may be an important factor in the development of colorectal cancer.


Journal of Physiology-paris | 1993

Vagal nerve and the gastric mucosal defense

Gy. Mózsik; O. Karádi; Á Király; Zoltán Matus; G. Sütö; Gy. Tóth; Áron Vincze

An essential role for an intact vagal nerve has been proven in the development of gastric mucosal cyto- and general protection. On the other hand, chemically-induced (ethanol, HCl, indomethacin) gastric mucosal damage is enhanced after acute surgical vagotomy. The aims of this paper were to study the possible mechanisms of the vagal nerve in the development of gastric mucosal defense. The following questions were addressed: 1) effect of surgical vagotomy on the development of ethanol- (ETOH), HCl-, and indomethacin (IND)-induced gastric mucosal damage: 2) changes in the gastric mucosal defense by scavengers, prostacyclin and other compounds (small doses of atropine and cimetidine; 3) changes in the gastric mucosal vascular permeability due to chemicals; 4) effect of indomethacin in the ETOH and HCl models with and without surgical vagotomy; 5) changes in the gastric mucosal content of prostacyclin and PGE2 in the ETOH and HCl models after surgical vagotomy; and 6) changes in the role of SH-groups in gastric mucosal defense after surgical vagotomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Physiology-paris | 2001

Changes of serum carotenoids in patients with esophageal, gastric, hepatocellular, pancreatic and colorectal cancer.

György Rumi; Zoltán Matus; Gyula Tóth; Alajos Pár; Zsuzsanna Nagy; Áron Vincze; Gyula Mózsik

UNLABELLED The serum levels of carotenoids (vitamin A, lutein, zeaxanthin, alfa- and beta cryptoxanthin, alfa- and beta-carotene) were measured in healthy persons (n=40) and in 98 patients with different malignant gastrointestinal diseases (44 patients with colon adenocarcinoma, 21 with gastric cancer, 15 with hepatocellular adenocarcinoma, 10 patients with pancreas adenocarcinoma and eight patients with esophagus cancer). The serum levels of carotenoids were measured with high-pressure liquid chromatography. The sera of the patients were taken at the time of the diagnosis. RESULTS the measurements indicated that (1) the serum level of vitamin A and zeaxanthin were significantly lower in all of these groups (except of pancreas adenocarcinoma), but the extent of the A decrease was different in the patients with different types of gastrointestinal malignancy. The serum level of vitamin A was in the healthy subjects 2.072+/-0.332 mmol/l and in the case of gastrointestinal malignancies was 0.77+/-0.14 mmol/l (P<0.001) The serum level of zeaxanthin was in the healthy subjects 0.143+/-0.057 mmol/l and at the malignancies was 0.042+/-0.014 mmol/l (P<0.01). (2) There were no significant differences in the serum levels of other carotenoids in the checked groups. (3) The serum level of cholesterol, total protein, albumin and haemoglobin were in the normal range in these patients. These results indicate that the carotenoids may be responsible nutritional factors (as nutritional scavengers) in the development of different malignant diseases. This supposed role in the carcinogenesis does not depend fully on the vitamin A activity.


Jpc-journal of Planar Chromatography-modern Tlc | 2010

A Sensitive Method for Thin-Layer Chromatographic Detection of Amphotericin B

András Fittler; Béla Kocsis; Zoltán Matus; Lajos Botz

Thin-layer chromatography with microbiological detection (direct bioautography) of amphotericin B. has never been reported. The combination of these methods can be used advantageously, especially when not only chemical identification of samples is required, but also when antifungal activity is of interest. In this paper a fast and easy-to-perform method is introduced in which major (RF 0.46) and minor (RF 0.31) components can be separated from amphotericin B, which itself is not a homogenous substance but mixture of polyenes. Thin-layer chromatography is performed on silica gel layers with chloroform-methanol-borate buffer 4:5:1 (v/v) as optimized mobile phase, and the microbiological activity of amphotericin B can be measured sensitively by direct bioautography. Candida albicans (ATCC 90028) and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ATCC 9763) fungus strains were tested. Among the detection methods investigated, direct bioautography with Candida albicans proved to be the most sensitive, with a detection limit of 0.8 ng per spot. For densitometric evaluation of plates with (385 nm) ten times more substance is required, and with a UV lamp (366 nm) as much as 50 ng AmB per spot is needed to visualize the main component.


Physiological Measurement | 2009

Measurement of the modification and interference rate of urinary albumin detected by size-exclusion HPLC

Lajos Markó; Gergő A. Molnár; Zoltán Wagner; Katalin Böddi; Tamás Kőszegi; Zoltán Szabó; Zoltán Matus; István András Szijártó; Ákos Mérei; Géza Nagy; István Wittmann

The measurement of the excretion of urinary albumin (albuminuria) is an important and well-established method to assess clinical outcomes. A high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method has been introduced to measure albuminuria. Using this method, it was found that commonly used immunological methods do not measure a fraction of urinary albumin. Some authors presumed that the reason of immuno-unreactivity is the modification of urinary albumin; some others presumed that the difference is merely because of interference. In order to decide this question, we established an HPLC method equipped with tandem UV and fluorescent detection to assess the changes in the detectability of albumin with the rate of modification. For this measurement, differently modified forms of albumin were used. Urine samples of diabetic patients were also measured to find a potential connection between the modification rate and clinical parameters. Secondly, we have established a reversed phase HPLC method to assess the interference rate. We conclude that albumin modification does not affect immunoreactivity. The modification rate of urinary albumin in diabetic patients showed a correlation with renal function. The interference rate of the albumin peak was found to be 12.7% on average, which does not explain the difference between the two methods.


Journal of Physiology-paris | 2001

Leiden mutation (as genetic) and environmental (retinoids) sequences in the acute and chronic inflammatory and premalignant colon disease in human gastrointestinal tract.

Gyula Mózsik; Zsuzsanna Nagy; Ágnes Nagy; György Rumi; O. Karádi; József Czimmer; Zoltán Matus; Gyula Tóth; Alajos Pár

BACKGROUND Tumor, calor, dolor, pallor and functio laesa are together involved in the different acute and chronic inflammatory processes. The processes involved in the inflammation are determined by differently acquired and hereditary factors. Recently the presence of a new genetic marker (Leiden point mutation) was found in Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis. On the other hand, the GI mucosal integrity was proven on gastrointestinal mucosal damage to be produced by different chemicals, xenobiotics, drugs. In human observations, the serum level of retinoids (vitamin A, lutein, zeaxanthin, alpha-, beta-carotene) was proven in patients with chronic gastrointestinal inflammatory bowel disease. The aims of this study were (1) to measure the prevalence of Leiden mutation; (2) to identify the changes in the serum retinoid level in patients with Helicobacter pylori infection of the stomach (n=24), hepatitis C infection (n=75), ileitis terminalis (Crohns disease; n=49), ulcerative colitis (n=35), colon polyposis (n=59) and adenocarcinoma in colon polyps (n=9), and 57 healthy persons were used in the control group; (3) to compare the directions of the changes in the measured parameters in the acute (H. pylori and hepatitis C infections), chronic (ileitis terminalis, ulcerative colitis) GI inflammatory diseases and in colon polyposis without and with malignisation. METHODS The Leiden mutation was measured by the method of polymerase chain reaction, the retinoid level in the patients serum was measured by high liquid cromathografic method (HPCL). RESULTS (1) It has been found that the prevalence of Leiden mutation increased significantly in patients with ileitis terminalis (P<0.001), ulcerative colitis (P<0.001), colon polyposis (P<0.001) and with colon polyps with malignisation (P<0.01). (2) Serum level of vitamin A and zeaxantin were decreased significantly in all group of patients except for the group with H. pylori infections. (3) alpha- and beta-carotenes were found to be practically at the same level as those in the control groups, except in patients of colon polyps with malignisation. (4) The vitamin A, lutein, zeaxantin, alpha- and beta-carotenes were decreased in patients with ileitis terminalis. CONCLUSIONS (1) The essential role of retinoids (carotenoids) as environmental factors are suggested for keeping GI mucosal integrity in human healthy subjects and patients. (2) Leiden mutation, as a genetic marker, can be used in the screening of patients with ileitis terminalis, ulcerative colitis and colon polyposis (without and with malignisation). (3) An opposite direction can be found between the increased prevalence of Leiden mutation and decrease of serum levels of retinoids in group of patients with ileitis terminalis, ulcerative colitis and colon polyposis (without and with malignisation).


Orvosi Hetilap | 2007

Analysis of microalbuminuria with immunonephelometry and high performance liquid chromatography. Evaluation of new criteria

Lajos Markó; Gergő A. Molnár; Zoltán Wagner; Tamás Kőszegi; Zoltán Matus; Márton Mohás; Mónika Kuzma; István András Szijártó; István Wittmann

INTRODUCTION Hypertension as well as type 2 diabetes mellitus is a major factor in population mortality. Both diseases damage the endothelium, the early sign of which is microalbuminuria, which can be screened by dipstick and can be diagnosed by using immuno-based and high performance liquid chromatography methods. Using high performance liquid chromatography, the non-immunoreactive albumin can be detected as well. AIMS The authors aimed at the examination of albuminuria in the case of immunonephelometrically negative patients with high performance liquid chromatography, in diabetic and hypertensive and non-diabetic hypertensive populations. The authors also wanted to compare the present (albumin-creatinine ratio: male: > or =2.5 mg/mmol, female: > or =3.5 mg/mmol) and a new criteria of the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation study (patients without diabetes: immunological method, > or =0.7 mg/mmol; high performance liquid chromatography, > or =3.1 mg/mmol; individuals with diabetes: immunological method, > or =1.4 mg/mmol; high performance liquid chromatography, > or =5.2 mg/mmol) of microalbuminuria. METHODS Examination of fresh urines of 469 microalbuminuria negative patients by dipstick were performed by immunonephelometry. Patients, who were microalbuminuria negative by immunonephelometry as well, were further analyzed by high performance liquid chromatography using the Accumintrade mark Kit, based on size-exclusion chromatography. RESULTS Three times higher albuminuria were found with high performance liquid chromatography than with immunonephelometry. The intraindividual coefficient of variation did not differ in the two methods (37 +/- 31% vs. 40 +/- 31%, p = 0.869; immunonephelometry vs. high performance liquid chromatography; mean +/- standard deviation). Using the present criteria for microalbuminuria, 43% of immunonephelometrically negative patients proved to be microalbuminuric by high performance liquid chromatography. Using the new criteria of the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation study, the rate of microalbuminuria positivity among the immunonephelometrically negative patients decreased to 14.5% by high performance liquid chromatography and the decrease in the number of microalbuminuria positive cases by high performance liquid chromatography could be observed mainly in the diabetic and hypertensive group (49% vs. 7.5%), while slighter decrease could be observed in the non-diabetic hypertensive group (37% vs. 26.5%). Applying the traditional criteria, the strongest predictor was the male gender by the logistic regression analysis. In 28% of microalbuminuria negative patients by immunonephelometry the diagnosis of microalbuminuria can be established using high performance liquid chromatography. CONCLUSIONS Almost in one-third of microalbuminuria negative patients by immunonephelometry the diagnosis of microalbuminuria can be established by high performance liquid chromatography for which diagnosis three constitutive urine examinations are still needed. New criteria determined by the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation study can be used neither in case of diabetic and hypertensive patients, nor in the case of non-diabetic hypertensive patients. The gender as the most important predictor of microalbuminuria cannot be ignored.


Journal of Chemical Research-s | 1997

Kinetic Studies on the Thermal Z/E-Isomerizationof C40-Carotenoids

Péter Molnár; Zoltán Matus; József Szabolcs; Tamás Körtvélyesi

The kinetics of thermal Z/E-isomerization among all-E-, 9(9′)Z-, 13(13′)Z- and 15Z-isomers of zeaxanthin 1, violaxanthin 2, capsorubin 3, capsanthin 4 and lutein epoxide 5 are studied at 333.4–368.4 K.


Tetrahedron Letters | 2001

'Prenigroxanthin' [(all-E,3R,3′S,6′S) -β,γ-carotene-3,3′,6′-triol], a novel carotenoid from red paprika (Capsicum annuum)

József Deli; Péter Molnár; Zoltán Matus; Gyula Tóth; Bruno Traber; Hanspeter Pfander

From the ripe fruits of red paprika (Capsicum annuum) prenigroxanthin, a minor carotenoid was isolated and, based on the spectral data and the proposed biosynthesis, identified as (all-E,3R,3′S,6′S)-β,γ-carotene-3,3′,6′-triol.

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